## variables commented out with a single #hash represent default values.
##
## Since PicoGeSHi has no dependencies PicoCMS will enable it by default.
## You can disable it by setting this to false:
##
#PicoGeSHi.enabled: true
#geshi:

    ## class to use for code blocks with language definitions (additionally, the
    ## "language-$lang" class is preserved, and the "$lang" class is added)
    ## If you change this you also need to change the css_template, if you want
    ## colors applied.
    #class: "geshi"

    ## Enable _plain_ line-numbering ?
    ## Please note that this value and the next are independent of each other
    ## - in other words: it is enough and recommended to enable only one
    ## true | false
    #line-numbers: false
    ## Alternate styling for lines every (fancy-line-numbers) row
    ## must be greater than 1 to be applied
    #fancy-line-numbers: 0
    ## start numbering at (default: 0)
    #line-start: 0
    ## enable chapter id for each line - this does not turn line numbers into links.
    #enable-ids: false

    ## template to activate this plugin for. Pass "all" to activate for all pages
    ## (nevertheless, GeSHi is only initialized when a code block with a language
    ## definition is found)
    #template: "post"
    ## load this css color template (below colors will be inserted):
    ## path is relative to the PicoGeSHi dir, where PicoGeSHi.php resides
    #css_template: "default.template.css"

## If you want the plugin to provide colors, you need to set the following to true.
## The plugin will still add the appropriate classes if you explicitely set it to
## false; that way one could apply separate CSS rules by some other means.
## This setting defaults to true however, and if no colors are set the plugin
## _will_ provide colors, defaulting to the following fallbacks.
##
#geshi_col:
#    enabled: true

## To avoid incompatibilities between dark and light themes, white and black  do
## not exist, instead there's two foreground colors and two background colors.
## The other colors are named analogously to e.g. terminal color schemes.
##
## Ideally, these are defined in your PicoCMS theme's (colors-...) YAML config
## and not here. Use any color format that twig can read and CSS understands.
## If you set geshi_col.enabled to true (it defaults to true) but don't define
## any colors, the below fallbacks are used, with a light (dark text on light
## background) theme in mind (see www.w3schools.com/cssref/css_colors.asp):
##
#    fg_def: Black # default text
#    fg_alt: DimGrey # alternative text
#    bg_def: Mocassin # default background
#    bg_alt: OldLace # default background
#    ##  red dark/light
#    col1: DarkRed
#    col9: FireBrick
#    ##  green dark/light
#    col2: ForestGreen
#    col10: LawnGreen
#    ##  yellow dark/light
#    col3: GoldenRod
#    col11: Gold
#    ##  blue dark/light
#    col4: CadetBlue
#    col12: CornflowerBlue
#    ##  magenta dark/light
#    col5: DarkViolet
#    col13: DarkOrchid
#    ##  cyan dark/light
#    col6: DarkCyan
#    col14: DeepSkyBlue
